John Fitch. Manual for Standard Lisp on IBM System 360 and 370.
Technical Report No. TB-6, Symbolic Computation Group, University of Utah, 1978?

"There was an EVALQUOTE lisp called Lisp/360 which was used at Utah in the
1970s; it came from Stanford and had been heavily modified by Kevin Kay.
... there was a Standard LISP for IBM 360
based on the same code, and renamed SLISP/360. It was an EVAL system.
The reason I know is because I did some of the modifications after Kevin
left Utah. I used it subsequently at Leeds, and in my archives I still
have the source. Also 2 Japanese, Kanada-san and a student I think,
transcribed this SLISP/360 into Motorola 68K assembler, and got it to
run!
It had a number of terrible features, but it did support REDUCE." [J. P. Fitch , comp.lang.lisp, February 18, 1994]

"Abstract: This document describes an implementation of Standard LISP which runs
on Tandem Computers Inc. NonStop II and NonStop TXP systems. It is
intended to be a reference document to be used in conjunction with the
"Standard Lisp Report", Marti et al, SIGPLAN Notices, Volume 14,
Number 10, October 1979 (here after refered to as the Standard)."

"Abstract: This manual describes the primitive data structures,
facilities and functions present in the Portable Standard LISP (PSL)
system. It describes the implementation details and functions of
interest to a PSL programmer. Except for a small number of hand-coded
routines for I/O and efficient function calling, PSL is written entirely
in itself, using a machine-oriented mode of PSL, called SYSLISP, to
perform word, byte, and efficient integer and string operations. PSL is
compiled by an enhanced version of the Portable LISP Compiler, and
currently runs on the DEC-20, VAX, and MC68000."

Applications

Bibliography, characteristics, documentation, available packages,
related projects, and information about ordering latest release. In 2008, REDUCE was made available under an open source license.

Anthony C. Hearn. REDUCE: The First Forty Years. In Proceedings of the A3L 2005, April 3-6, Passau, Germany Conference in Honor of the 60th Birthday of Volker Weispfenning, Books on Demand. Online at reduce-algebra.com

"Cambridge Lisp was developed in the period just after Lisp/370 and
during the second phase of Standard Lisp, but before Portable Standard Lisp.
The authors of Cambridge Lisp were individually involved in Standard Lisp
and Lisp/370 and these experiences are reflected in the structure of
Cambridge Lisp. As with Standard Lisp, Cambridge Lisp was borne out of a
need to support algebra research but rather than following the Standard Lisp
report word for word, there was a strong influence from the heavier emphasis
placed on semantics by Lisp/370." [Padget 1988]

Cambridge Lisp was written in BCPL. More recently, its authors produced a
C-based successor under the Codemist brand.

Julian Padget. Three Uncommon Lisps. Proceedings of the First
International Workshop on LISP Evolution and
Standardization,
February 22-23, 1988, Paris France, Published by IOS, Amsterdam, 1988,
pages 39-44.
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